Drawing Conclusions: The Walking Dead

2014-03-15T18:41:50-04:00

I first made the acquaintance of the series during my first Dewey's Read-a-Thon, when I was looking for graphic novels to entertain Mr. BIP; we've both become completely hooked. I was struck by the comments in the introduction, including this one: “This is a very character driven endeavor.

Drawing Conclusions: The Walking Dead2014-03-15T18:41:50-04:00

Not-So-Sweet and Swedish: Mankell

2014-07-11T17:11:09-04:00

The Kurt Wallander series was one of the first of the Scandinavian mystery series to cause a buzz in North America, but I was frustrated by the fact that the earliest volumes weren't translated into English as quickly as I wanted them. You see, I'm obsessive about reading mystery series

Not-So-Sweet and Swedish: Mankell2014-07-11T17:11:09-04:00

Sweet and Swedish

2014-07-11T16:03:23-04:00

1961; Dell Publishing, 1975 Maria Gripe's trilogy is just charming. Josephine chooses her own name because the name Anna Grå is too big for her, like a pair of shoes that she needs to grow into. She is six years old. Her blue sweater is getting too small but

Sweet and Swedish2014-07-11T16:03:23-04:00

An Assortment of Teenlit: Four Books

2014-03-15T18:20:49-04:00

Aristophane’s The Zabîme Sisters Trans. Matt Madden (2010) This was the happy product of a browsing session on a summer day that found me seeking the relief of the public library's A/C. I brought it home and took it to bed on a still-too-hot night, the sort when you really

An Assortment of Teenlit: Four Books2014-03-15T18:20:49-04:00

Philippa Gregory’s The Lady of the Rivers (2011)

2014-03-15T18:02:55-04:00

Who wouldn't fall for a guy with the "finest collection of books and manuscripts outside the Church in Europe"? Mind you, this is a time when a bookworm can't necessarily slip a bound volume into her purse or pocket. A work is as likely to be on a

Philippa Gregory’s The Lady of the Rivers (2011)2014-03-15T18:02:55-04:00
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